Tag: SUSE Linux distributions

Note: I am using this and definately this is a big improvement over the previous versions. Here is the blog from gnome blog:

After more than a year of heavy development, NetworkManager 0.8 was unleashed on the world a few weeks ago. While we obviously couldn’t make everyone happy just yet, this release includes a ton of great stuff. Much of it is under the hood, so while it won’t dazzle you in a blinding flash of light, it should still make your head explode.

IPv6: we’ve added support for static and autoconfigured IPv6. Welcome to 2010. git master (ie 0.8.1) has support for DHCPv6 if you’re using the ISC dhclient 4.0 or above. 2007 called Debian and wants dhclient 3.0.x back. So until Debian upgrades dhclient to something recent, only Fedora, SUSE and a few other distros get DHCPv6.

udev: we had a party last week, and we stabbed HAL in the face and buried it out back in the woods. All hardware detection is done with udev now. Stuff should just work more smoothly.

system settings service: nm-system-settings is dead. NetworkManager at it. One less process to run, less memory used, and a simpler architecture. This eliminates the 4-second delay waiting to figure out if hot-plugged hardware should be ignored by NM or not. Faster network connections for you.

3G: and best of all, we’ve punted out mobile broadband handing to ModemManager. Just like wpa_supplicant handles all the wifi, modem-manager handles your 3G modems. It’s so much more capable than NM 0.7 that there’s a huge street party about how great it is. ModemManager lets us implement tons of oft-requested features like roaming, 2G/3G mode preference, signal strength display, access technology, etc. It’s neat. Fedora 13 has most of this right now.

And finally, we’ve rocked the documentation world. There are manpages everywhere. There’s tons of new documentation on the wiki. If you have a question, chances are you can find something about it there. Best of all, there’s a new Debugging Guide that should cover almost all aspects of debugging NetworkManager and how to get good information to help fix your bugs. We’ll love you longtime if you look at it before submitting a bug report.

With this kind of base to build on, we’ve literally got a truckload of really awesome shit queued up for NetworkManager 0.8.1. More on that later.

I’ll also be starting a series called “What You Don’t Know About NetworkManager Could Fill A Keg“, in which we’ll explore various random stuff about NetworkManager that you should know, but probably don’t because we never got around to telling you.